Operating sales in Mumbai and London were weaker by 20 percent and 50 percent, respectively, compared to the agency's expectations for the nine months to December 2018, it said.

The city-based company is one of the largest realty players in the country and also has projects in Britain. (Reuters)

Global ratings agency Moody’s Thursday downgraded its outlook on Lodha Developers to ‘negative’ from ‘stable’ citing liquidity concerns emanating from falling sales and rising debt burden. The city-based company is one of the largest realty players in the country and also has projects in Britain. Moody’s has, however, affirmed the corporate family rating at B2.

“The change in outlook to negative reflects the weakening in Lodha’s liquidity profile, because of lower-than-expected operating sales and delays in execution of its planned asset sales, both in London and India,” Saranga Ranasinghe, an assistant vice-president and analyst at the agency said in a note.

Operating sales in Mumbai and London were weaker by 20 percent and 50 percent, respectively, compared to the agency’s expectations for the nine months to December 2018, it said. It noted that sales in Mumbai, its biggest market, were affected due to tight liquidity conditions in the three months to December 2018, but picked up in the March quarter, but London remains a worry due to Brexit uncertainties.

In the absence of improvement in operating sales in London, Lodha will have to rely on asset sales in both India and London to meet its liquidity needs, it said. Illustrating the company’s debt commitments, it said Lodha has a 290 million pounds loan maturing in December 2019 (extended from August 2019), USD 324 million in bonds maturing in March 2020 after a USD 1 million buyback, and a further 517 million pounds loan maturing in March 2021.

“The company’s cash balance and expected operating cash flows will not be sufficient to meet these debt repayments,” it said, adding asset sales will be crucial. The agency said it expects the company to generate around USD 250 million from the sale of a commercial building in New Cuff Parade n Mumbai and a retail mall in the nearby Palava, which would provide it with net proceeds of around USD 130 million after retiring around USD 120 million of debt.

The company is also in the midst of divesting a 28 per cent equity stake in its London properties to a third party, which could allow the company to carry out further stake reductions, but there have been delays in the receipt of funds from the equity stake sale. The outlook is unlikely to return to stable so long as the Lodha’s ability to repay its near-term debt remains contingent on its ability to execute asset sales, it said, adding a ratings upgrade is not possible for the next 12-18 months.